Why don’t we use THIS cycle as a Knowledge Management model?
We are used to seeing pictures of knowledge cycles, but there is one cycle you never see, and it’s very important.
You can find very many versions of the knowledge cycle, and they all seem to work the same way.
They start with “Create” or “Capture”, and progress through “Store”, “Share” etc until they get to “Use” or “Apply. Some have as few as 3 steps, some have 8 or more steps, and the 4-step basic has even made it into the Stock Photo collections. However all these cycles work in the same way, as all of them are “Push” cycles.
By “Push Cycle” I mean a cycle that is driven by knowledge supply, and describes how that supply of knowledge works through various stages until the knowledge is used again. It is a supply chain model, and people use the cycle to put in place roles and processes to move knowledge along the steps in the supply chain.
Supply is only half the story, and you need to look at Demand as well.
The diagram shown here is a cycle driven by knowledge demand – a “Pull cycle” – and it works like this.
- The cycle starts with a problem, and the identification of the need for knowledge to solve the problem (the “need to know”)
- The first step is to seek for that knowledge – to search online, and to ask others
- Seeking/asking is (if the KM framework is operating well) followed by finding
- However generally we tend to “over-find”. Unless we are lucky, or there is a very good KM system, we find more than we need, so the next step is to review the results and select those which seem most relevant in the context of the problem.
- This found knowledge then needs to be integrated into what is already known about the problem, and integrated into solutions, approaches, procedures and plans.
- Finally the integrated knowledge needs to be applied to the problem.
So why do we never see this Pull cycle in diagram form?
- Is it because Pull (Demand) is less important than Push (supply)? Surely not! Most people would see them as equally important, and there is an argument that Pull is in fact a bigger driver of knowledge transfer than Pull.
- Is it because the Pull cycle is less useful than the Push model? Surely not! If we can generate knowledge pull, and a demand for knowledge, we can spark knowledge supply.
- Is it because the Pull cycle is more difficult to work with than the Push cycle? Maybe this is one reason. Asking is less of a natural behaviour and more of a cultural barrier than sharing, so sharing may be the easier option. But ignoring barriers wont help you in the long run.
- Is it because the Pull cycle is less measurable? The Push cycle is often linked with the creation of documents, and this is something that can be measured. Leaving aside the question about whether anyone is looking for these documents, and whether these documents are useful when found, it is easier to measure the first couple of steps in a Push cycle than it is to measure similar steps in a Pull cycle. However you can also measure searches, and measure questions in a community forum.
- Is it because people only want one diagram? Yes, probably, but we know that KM cannot be reduced to a single and simple diagram; it is far too nuanced for that.
- Is it because everyone else draws their cycles this way? Probably yes. But just because everyone else does it, doesn’t make it correct or sufficient.
There are many places where this Pull cycle can be applied very well.
- Each individual uses this cycle when searching for knowledge. Most of the steps are done in the individuals head, but it may be useful to talk them through with a manager or colleague.
- You can apply the cycle within a Peer Assist meeting, and the format of the meeting can follow the entire cycle from asking the questions, to reviewing the answers, to integrating them into the forward workplan.
- You can apply it within a Community of Practice forum. Someone asking a question on the forum could be asked to give feedback on the answers they received, the knowledge they selected from these answers, how they integrated this knowledge into their plans and (ideally) how it helped solve the problem.
- You can apply it as part of KM planning. A project team can identify their knowledge needs, conduct a search/ask activity, then get together to discuss how they will select and integrate the knowledge they have found.
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